….
The Daily Bugle arc, the delivery boy job, the subtle guilt and pressure he faced before ever donning a suit, all of it would stay.
It wasn't even a difficult decision for him, not really.
Some choices just made sense.
But then came the part he was most uncertain about.
Not the villains, not even the origin story.
Sure, it is a tough plot to fill in, but he is confident for that arc.
However, he can't say the same for the -
Romantic Interest.
Gotta say it, a marvel film or a character without a proper love interest isn't worth it.
Captain America, Iron Man, Thor, Doctor Strange, Ant-Man, or even Star Lord from the [Guardians of the Galaxy].
They all have excellent love arcs…
…of course most of them were failures, except for Iron-Man.
But that's what makes them special.
So, choosing a love interest for Spider-Man?
A whole lot of pressure.
Still, he certainly has some good choices though.
Obviously, the iconic universal one -
Mary Jane Watson - from 2002's [Spider-Man]
In short - MJ.
Her character was never just a love interest.
She was fire in the veins of Spider-Man's mythos - beautiful, broken, bold, sometimes selfish, always hurting.
However, in the first film MJ was everywhere - center stage, wrapped in red curls and heartbreak, constantly orbiting Peter's life, and with that came backlash.
And in Regal's mind, she was also the most cautious about choosing as the love interest.
He had seen it, lived through the era when Kirsten Dunst's MJ became the lightning rod for every fan debate.
The name-calling, the infamous label - "gold digger."
And yet, others defended her just as fiercely.
Regal remembered watching [Spider-Man 2] at fifteen, seeing that final frame - MJ staring out the window after Peter swings off - and feeling something.
Not closure, neither romance but something messier.
She wanted him, but she was scared of what that meant, she didn't understand it yet, and neither did Peter.
Later, watching [The Amazing Spider-Man], where the love interest -
Gwen Stacy.
She was radiant, clever, grounded in science and not drama, and where their relationship felt earned, not forced.
Where her death felt like the most unforgivable twist the universe could write.
And then came [Homecoming].
Zendaya's MJ.
Honestly, Regal thinks her character is kind of the coolest of the three.
Yeah, at first glance she seems distant, and even unnoticeable.
However, she was still magnetic.
She wasn't even called MJ until the sequel.
It was clever, introducing another character to steal the show in the first part, while the real one was tucked under a hoodie.
Regal liked that, restraint and ambiguity.
So when it came time to write his [Spider-Man], he had three choices.
Cut MJ entirely.
Write Gwen instead, introducing Betty Brant.
Or delay romance altogether and focus on Peter becoming himself first.
Push her to the sequel - or further, he had total freedom.
And yet—
Mary Jane still lingered in the corner of every draft, waiting, not as a plot device, but as a question, Regal couldn't escape.
Because when you stripped down Peter Parker - took away the powers, the suit, the science - you found a boy who wanted to matter to someone.
And MJ? She was the only one who never saw him as Spider-Man first.
She saw the dork, the coward and a kid who missed school plays and forgot birthdays.
She saw the loser Peter.
And she still loved him…
Did she though?
Right… that uncertainty.
It's terrifying.
But it was also… real.
In that way, she was his mirror, his failure and his dream in one.
Regal scribbled something in the margin of his notebook.
"MJ doesn't save Peter, but she makes him admit he wants to be saved."
He leaned back, the room was quiet except for the soft hum of the desk lamp and the muted chaos of New York filtering in through the window.
Outside, the skyline was still, and in his mind, Peter Parker stood in the cold, no mask, staring at a girl with red hair who would hurt him, heal him, and maybe leave him again.
But he would love her anyway.
And Regal knew—
She was staying in the film.
Of course he had to tweak her character traits here and there a bit.
And let Peter Parker fail to achieve his love in another universe too.
"How am I kidding?" Regal muttered under his breath, sinking into his chair. "Fail once? His whole damn life is just… fail, try again, fail better, get back up, lose it all."
That was the real Spider-Man arc.
It wasn't about just punching villains or swinging through Manhattan, it was about loss, and MJ was the embodiment of that.
Regal remembered reading a theory - years ago, late at night, that Peter Parker was cursed.
"Destined to be alone." He whispered.
That anyone he loved was doomed, that the closer he got to happiness, the faster it crumbled.
He didn't even disagree.
Peter wasn't just lonely, he was destined to be, a hero with a heart too full, surrounded by people he could never truly hold onto.
So… what kind of Peter was his Spider-Man going to be?
Regal stared at the blinking cursor.
He didn't know, not really.
He hadn't figured it out yet, and maybe he wouldn't - not in this first script.
Maybe in the second film, or the third.
Or maybe… never.
….
Then came the other man, arguably the most hated and yet respected character in the entire Spider-Man universe.
A figure of iron will, booming voice, and a mustache as iconic as his vendetta. J. Jonah Jameson.
The editor-in-chief of the Daily Bugle, and Peter Parker's future boss.
Regal had no second thoughts here.
If he was going to lean into the 2002 Spider-Man tone, then of course Peter had to work part-time at the Buglem, the moment that decision was made, Jonah's place in the story was locked in.
It was practically automatic.
There wasn't much to change either, he would remain loud, inflexible, brash, and oddly principled.
But here's where Regal made a choice.
He wasn't going to spoon-feed the audience a moral takeaway.
He wasn't going to put some monologue in Jonah's mouth explaining why he hated Spider-Man, nor would he inject flashbacks or tragic backstories.
He was simply going to show Jonah.
Show the man.
Let the audience see him, barking orders, tossing headlines, labeling a masked hero as a menace not out of malice, but out of conviction.
Real, unshakable belief, a man who stood by his opinions even if they came crashing down around him.
Regal wanted people to debate Jonah, not blindly side with or against him.
Was his hatred of Spider-Man justified? Was it personal? Or was it rooted in a deeper fear of unchecked power, of anonymity, of masks?
He would leave that to the audience.
But in Regal's mind, Jonah was a great man, just a stubborn one.
He remembered that scene clearly from the original film, the one that sealed Jonah's legacy for him, the moment where a Green Goblin storms into the Daily Bugle office, demanding to know who took the Spider-Man photographs that have been appearing in the newspaper.
And Jonah, without hesitation, refuses to give up Peter Parker's name, claiming he doesn't know who the photographer is.
The audience would know he was lying, and Jonah knew too, but he did it anyway.
The photographer being his employee might be one reason but more than that it was because he sees Peter Parker as nothing but a young freelance photographer.
A Kid.
It's a defining moment that shows beneath all of Jameson's bluster and his public crusade against Spider-Man he wouldn't cross certain lines, he possesses genuine integrity and loyalty to those under his protection.
That scene alone told Regal everything he needed to know, this man wasn't evil.
He wasn't even wrong, necessarily, he was just… Jonah.
A storm of opinions and ethics, flawed and ferocious, and Regal was going to let him be exactly that.
….
The villain.
Regal stared at the glowing laptop screen like it had betrayed him, unsure whether to backspace or push forward.
He leaned back, stretching, glancing at the whiteboard behind the monitor.
It was already a mess, names, arrows, scribbled location notes.
Below that, a half-finished timeline traced Peter Parker's arc from an ordinary kid in Queens to the moment the spider bit him.
That was the part Regal had finished, barely five percent of the whole thing, but it felt like something.
He had written one line, just one, about the Green Goblin who threatened J. Jonah Jameson for the photos.
But now, as Regal returned to the next page… he hesitated.
Was this really the villain he wanted to use?
For now he changed Green goblin to just - Super Villain.
He exhaled, raking a hand through his hair, eyes bouncing between the script notes and a folder named "Alt Villain Paths."
The dilemma was deeper than just naming, in all the previous Spider-Man films, Raimi's, Webb's, and even Watts', the first villains always left a psychological stain.
Green Goblin had been an echo of fatherhood, madness, and betrayal.
The Lizard was Curt Connors, a man of science and consequence, vulture had been a blue-collar menace with personal stakes.
Every first villain defined the kind of Spider-Man they were dealing with, and Regal wasn't entirely sure who his Peter Parker was yet.
Was Peter still raw and idealistic?
Then Goblin might feel too theatrical, Regal liked the idea of the Goblin being a slow-burn villain, someone who gets seeded, mentioned in whispers, seen only in fragmented reflections.
…..
From there on Regal fastned his writing speed..
Days passed by…
And the scripting was getting closer to being finished..
His story had it all… Tobey's painful learning curves, Andrew's tech-savvy creativity, and even moments from Tom's youthful spontaneity.
He was borrowing the soul, trimming down the noise and only keeping the beats that mattered, the ones that helped shape the character.
From the 2002 film, he brought in the sudden wall-crawling and ceiling-hanging chaos, Peter scrambling in panic, more creature than boy at first.
The kitchen scene with Aunt May yelling from below? Regal didn't write it the same, but the feeling of it, the humor, the absurdity, the fear of being found out - was there.
From The Amazing Spider-Man, he stole the self-made quality.
The hunger in Peter, the trial-and-error process…
And the obvious hummer with it.
Regal included scenes of Peter sketching possible masks on the backs of notebooks during class, measuring fabric samples, testing things in back alleys when no one was watching.
That touch of nerd-engineer made him more believable.
And from Homecoming, Regal liked the way Peter messed up, the innocence and the impulsiveness.
Not to make him look immature, but to show how real he was still a kid.
So Regal added in moments of Peter jumping off rooftops without thinking, or attempting to help a street vendor only to cause a scene.
Short beats, but essential, they weren't jokes, they were the growing pains of a real teenager trying to handle something far bigger than himself.
And it blended - beautifully.
None of it felt forced, nor did it interrupt the flow in fact it enhanced it.
Regal's Peter Parker wasn't Tobey, or Andrew, or Tom.
He was something else entirely.
But in his DNA, there were fragments of all of them, the earnestness, the resourcefulness, the chaos.
To merge three origin stories into one cohesive framework?
On paper, that's absurd, a recipe for tonal chaos, every instinct in a seasoned filmmaker would scream, "Don't."
And yet - Regal did.
Why did it work?
Is it because he has a system?
No…
It worked because it was Spider-Man.
If this had been any other franchise, any other hero, Regal wouldn't have even tried, he wouldn't have dared.
Because this kind of creative fusion shouldn't work.
But it did.
Because this was Spider-Man.
That's the only answer Regal could give.
It worked... because it had to.
.
….
[To be continued…]
★─────⇌•★•⇋─────★
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